Chinese Gardens: Man & Nature in Harmony

Landscaping Ideas: Chinese Garden

The Chinese Garden is carefully planned and chaotic. You see a perfect, miniature landscape, yet it has no order.

Chinese Gardens are perfect for meditation, relaxation and entertaining.

Chinese Garden Principles

Borrow scenery

Incorporate scenery outside your yard into the garden. Can you see the hills or mountains from your yard? A river? Other buildings?

Get creative and figure out how you can bring outside elements into the landscape of your yard.

Concealment & Surprise

The Chinese Garden is not meant to be seen all at once. Hide your focal points so that you catch a glimpse here and a glimpse there.

Decide where to place your main feature. Usually this is a pond, right in the middle of the garden.

Figure out where your vantage points are. These would be your windows looking out into the yard, as well as various places in the yard itself. Even tiny yards can have a shrouded path and can pack a surprise when you round that bend.

On paper, play around with placing key elements so that your main focal point is partially hidden, no matter which vantage point you are at.

Key Elements of Chinese Gardens

Walls

Typical Chinese Gardens are surrounded by a white wall. On a budget? Fences can be painted. Plywood makes an interesting, utilitarian wall. Or, plant bamboo for a fast growing, living wall.

Water

Place a pond in the center of the garden. If your yard is tiny, make it a small pond. But if your yard is big, get creative! How about two ponds connected by a stream flowing under an arched bridge?

Architecture

Surround your pond with architectural elements. These don’t have to be pagoda-like structures. Your house counts. So do gazebos, trellis’, pergolas & arbors.

Structures surround the pond. Gazebo, trellis, arbors.

Vegetation

The following plants are popular — not only for their beauty and fragrance, but for what they signify.